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Exchange and Outlook UPDATE, Outlook Edition, January 7, 2003

Exchange and Outlook UPDATE, Outlook Edition—brought to you by Exchange & Outlook Administrator, a print newsletter from Windows & .NET Magazine that contains practical advice, how-to articles, tips, and techniques to help you do your job today.
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January 7, 2003—In this issue:

1. COMMENTARY

  • The Year at a Glance

2. ANNOUNCEMENT

  • The Microsoft Mobility Tour Is Coming Soon to a City Near You!

3. HOT RELEASE (ADVERTISEMENT)

  • EAS: Off-Line Access to Archived Email

4. RESOURCE

  • Tip: Changing a Calendar's Default Colors

5. NEW AND IMPROVED

  • Synchronize Your Personal and Group Calendars

6. CONTACT US
See this section for a list of ways to contact us.


1. COMMENTARY
(contributed by Sue Mosher, News Editor, [email protected])

  • THE YEAR AT A GLANCE

  • Welcome to 2003! Do you know what you'll be doing months from now? If so, you might be interested in a tool that turns Outlook into a year planner, letting you block out days at a time for vacations, conferences, and other daylong and weeklong events.

    The tool is called Outlook 2000+ Year View, from Planet Software Australia. The heart of the tool is an ActiveX control that displays an entire year's calendar. You don't need to be a developer to use this custom control, though, because the download includes an installer that sets up an Outlook folder home page that shows the year planner for any calendar folder you select.

    When you run the calinstall.exe program, it asks you to enter an installation folder in which to store the control files, the Outlook calendar folder you want the control to display, a license key, and a URL (beginning with either file:// or http://) that points to the system folder in which you want the installer to place the Year View subfolder. The installer places the outlookyearview.cab file containing the control's setup files in the installation folder. It also creates a file named Year View.htm that uses the control to display the calendar folder that you specified. On the Outlook side, the installer creates a Year View subfolder under the chosen calendar folder, sets the folder home page for the subfolder to the Year View.htm file, and turns on the folder home page.

    When you first access the Year View subfolder, you experience a slight delay as the control is installed; then the folder home page displays the full calendar for the current year. It shows only daylong and weeklong events to give you a "big picture" view of your calendar.

    Along the right side of the control, you see a list of colors starting with Unused 1 and ending with Other. You can link each color to an Outlook category. For example, right-click Unused 1, then choose Rename. If you change the name to Holiday, the control displays all events marked with the Holiday category in brown. You can change the color by right-clicking the color in the list and choosing Colour.

    You aren't limited to the 14 categories that the control initially shows. Add more by right-clicking any color, then choosing New Category. Any event not marked with a category has the color set for Other.

    Arrow keys at the upper right of the screen let you switch from one year to another. Point the mouse at any entry on the calendar to see the dates and subject for that event in a box at the top of the page. Click any event to edit it. To delete an event, right-click it and choose Delete. Print the page to get a color-coded view of the times you've blocked out for the year. You don't, however, see individual event titles in the printout.

    The Year View control isn't just for viewing events—you can also create new events. Right-click anywhere in the calendar, then choose New Appointment and pick a color category. The cursor turns into a pencil. Drag it across the days for which you want to create the event. A new Outlook appointment will appear with the category and start and end dates already filled in. All you need to add are the subject and any other details.

    You can create as many copies of the Year View.htm file as you need to create folder home pages for different calendar folders. Just edit the copy to change the Folder parameter that determines which Outlook folder the control displays. For public folders, you'll probably want to put the .htm files in a folder on your intranet Web server. You could also place the outlookyearview.cab file in a network location and edit the Year View.htm file to point to that file instead of the local drive.


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    2. ANNOUNCEMENT
    (brought to you by Windows & .NET Magazine and its partners)

  • THE MICROSOFT MOBILITY TOUR IS COMING SOON TO A CITY NEAR YOU!

  • This outstanding seven-city event will help support your growing mobile workforce. Industry guru Paul Thurrott discusses the coolest mobility hardware solutions around, demonstrates how to increase the productivity of your "road warriors" with the unique features of Windows XP and Office XP, and much more. You could also win an HP iPAQ Pocket PC. There is no charge for these live events, but space is limited so register today! Sponsored by Microsoft, HP, and Toshiba.

    3. HOT RELEASE (ADVERTISEMENT)

  • EAS: OFF-LINE ACCESS TO ARCHIVED EMAIL

  • EAS has delivered an enhanced Offline Folder (.ost) capability for Outlook 2000/2. Synchronizing the offline folder files (.ost) when using EAS reduces the chance of the .ost file becoming corrupt. Request a Web Demo.

    4. RESOURCE
    (contributed by Sue Mosher, [email protected])

  • TIP: CHANGING A CALENDAR'S DEFAULT COLORS
  • Q: How can I change the default color scheme of a saved calendar when I use Outlook's File, Save as Web Page command?

    A: A file named cal.css controls most of the color and font settings. When you publish a calendar to a Web folder, Outlook copies this Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) file to the folder. You can then edit the style sheet in Microsoft FrontPage or a text editor to change the styles. Outlook usually doesn't try to copy over the new style when you save subsequent calendars, but just in case it does, you can set the file to read-only.

    See the Exchange & Outlook Administrator Web site for more great tips from Sue Mosher.

    5. NEW AND IMPROVED
    (contributed by Carolyn Mader, [email protected])

  • SYNCHRONIZE YOUR PERSONAL AND GROUP CALENDARS

  • OpenDoor Software announced SynchIT! Outlook Suite (SOS), software that lets you synchronize and manage your personal and group calendars. SOS bundles CalendWare and Public2PrivateWare (P2P), Exchange add-on tools that simplify appointment scheduling in the workplace. CalendWare automatically copies personal calendar items to a selected public calendar and keeps the items synchronized on the two calendars. P2P copies all items in a specified date range in a source calendar (usually a group calendar) to a target calendar (usually a personal calendar) and lets you activate synchronization manually or on a schedule. SOS costs $875 for a domain license. Special pricing is available for qualified academic institutions, nonprofit organizations, and government agencies. Contact OpenDoor Software at 813-977-5739 or 800-837-8636.

    6. CONTACT US
    Here's how to reach us with your comments and questions:

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